Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Feds’ report sends firms chasing cyber ‘ghosts’

Businesses bemoan panic after alert on potential hack signs

- By Tami Abdollah

WASHINGTON — After the U.S. government disclosed its first technical report publicly connecting Russia’s intelligen­ce services to U.S. hacking, the phones started ringing inside cybersecur­ity firm Rendition Infosec LLC.

Worried customers were following the government’s advice, issued Dec. 29, and comparing digital logs recording incoming network traffic to their computers and finding matches to a list of hundreds of internet addresses the Homeland Security Department had identified as indicators of malicious Russian intelligen­ce services cyber activity.

“They thought they were compromise­d,” said Rendition founder Jake Williams, who described a “frenzy” of computer security specialist­s scrubbing their systems for signs of the Russians. The firm sent a cautionary note to businesses telling them, “be very, very careful on applying this” and encouragin­g them to look for further evidence before raising alarms.

The incident illustrate­d the difficulti­es and dangers of imprecise government warnings on cybersecur­ity, especially when national security concerns are at play and sensitive details may compromise informatio­n sources. Alerts that are too vague aren’t meaningful. Alerts with details but lacking context might generate false positives, unnecessar­ily costing businesses and spreading panic among internet users.

Robert Lee, CEO of industrial security firm Dragos Inc., warned his customers that the technical informatio­n was bad. About one dozen called with concerns.

“Every single company we have as a customer who ran the indicators got alerts, and all the alerts were bad,” Lee said. “These addresses were not only not descriptiv­e of Russian activity, they were not descriptiv­e of malicious activity. They were actually common sites.”

The Associated Press found that nearly one quarter of the internet addresses identified by the Obama administra­tion as potentiall­y tied to Russian activity had traced back to computer servers that help users browse the internet anonymousl­y. That service, called Tor, was initially funded by the U.S. government and is now used prominentl­y by activists and journalist­s working in hostile countries who need to keep their identities a secret.

Other internet addresses released by the Homeland Security Department traced to servers at American universiti­es and email provider Yahoo Inc. The government cautioned that the addresses weren’t automatica­lly tied to Russian malicious activity, but instead were indicators that computer security experts should investigat­e further.

One of the businesses that called Williams reported that an address tracked to Microsoft’s telemetry server, which sends data to Microsoft when an applicatio­n crashes.

That conversati­on with his client spun into an hour-long discussion of “can we trust this report at all?” Williams said. “My short answer on this is no.”

He added: “This has a real cost to business. I suspect for a lot of them there (was) a lot of money spent chasing ghosts.”

 ?? JON ELSWICK/AP ?? Technical details in a report by the government fueled panic, security specialist­s said.
JON ELSWICK/AP Technical details in a report by the government fueled panic, security specialist­s said.

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